Sorry for the delay in responding. I've been moving house.
That will be impressive when finished. I admire anyone who can handle the programme for 3D printing - it is certainly adding a new area to our hobby.
Stephen.
Thanks. CAD isn't hard per se, it's just a different skillset to be learned. It's like airbrushing, or model building - the fundamentals aren't all that hard to understand, but mastering them takes time and patience. It's a really cool feeling to design something on your PC and then hold it in your hand once printed, though.
Fascinating stuff! I enjoy seeing projects like this in such detail, thank you for sharing so much of this journey.
I admire anyone who can handle the programme for 3D printing - it is certainly adding a new area to our hobby.
I'm learning CAD for just that purpose, but it isn't as easy to pick up as I'd initially thought.
I'm hoping it will serve as a bit of a tutorial for anyone interested in the digital side of things, rather than just showing a completed model as "here's one I made earlier". If there's anything you want to see in more detail, LMK.
One of the biggest hurdles I found with learning CAD was simply figuring out how to think about applying steps. I did a lot of design, then undo because I'd done things in the wrong order, then re-do because inserting a process broke all the other operations. Not a terrible way to learn though - once you've thorn away six hours work because you messed something up on the first step, you tend to remember that lesson!

1/144 scale and still 44 inches long!! These things must have been quite a sight in the air.
They were ridiculous. They were basically the size of battleships, floating in the sky. And this is a 'small' one - the Hindenburg is 5'8" in 1/144.
Hi MoFo.
The N Class is a great choice, a really cool looking Zeppelin. Will it have any of the SSW Torpedo Gliders attached?
Alan.
Yeah, it is cool with the gondola underneath. Next up will be one of the pre-war passenger ships, with the ridiculous-looking mass of control surfaces. They look like Venetian blinds!

And yes, the plan is to have the gliders underneath.
What a great (in many senses) project!!! - Greetings!
Maybe I'm wrong, but I prefer to say it now that the problem can be addressed... in the last render the rings don't seem to be equidistant lengthwise as I think they should be. Have you checked that?
Cheers,
Beto
Thanks! And grrr! But thanks! I appreciate the criticism. Good eye - the spacing was indeed wrong. That's what I get for just following the drawings, rather than double checking the measurements. They should be spaced 10m apart (that's one of the defining characteristics of the N class - it was the first Zeppelin to adopt the standard 10m spacing), mine were not only uneven, but the wrong spacing. Fudge.
So, it's fixed now (will update later), but what seemed like a simple fix - just adjust the spacing - essentially involved re-building the entire airship. The cool thing (and the curse) about Zeppelins is that they're quite 'mathematical' in their design. Everything is spaced at even distances (to the meter, even if those measurements aren't all the same). Everything lines up (the gun platform aligns to a main station; the rigging and struts line up with stations), which makes it easier to draft... but if something is off, it has ripples through the rest of the work. So in this case, a 'simple' re-work of the stations meant re-designing the envelope gondola, the envelope itself, and the gun platform, plus all the location points for the struts, rigging and external gondolas (gondolae). About the only things that didn't need altered were the tailplanes. Sigh.
(but I do appreciate it - I've seen another Zeppelin being built elsewhere that has the ribs in the wrong locations, and it drives me nuts!)
This is going to be good !
Alexis
I hope so.
Like all of the others I will say this is/ will be an impressive build! Looking forward to your progress.
RAGIII
Thanks.